The Paper
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Ron Howard
Tony Hoty
Hap Hairston
Siobhan Fallon Hogan
Vincent D'arbouze
Lynne Thigpen
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Workaholic New York City tabloid editor Henry Hackett loves the adrenaline rush his job gives him, but the long hours and lousy salary are starting to grate on his wife Martha. With the paper facing cutbacks and his wife pregnant, Hackett contemplates taking a more sedate job with a more respectable paper, but a double murder and the racial profiling of two teen suspects draws him back in in order to break one more hot story.
Cast
Tony Hoty
Hap Hairston
Siobhan Fallon Hogan
Vincent D'arbouze
Lynne Thigpen
Aloysius R Burke
Myra Taylor
Jerry Rosa
Shannon E Donohue
Joanna Molloy
Larry Hackett
Joseph Pentangelo
Jason Alexander
Stephen Koepp
Sally-jane Heit
Amos Grunebaum
James Ritz
Herb Lovelle
Spalding Gray
Ed Jupp
Mike G. Sheehan
Lee Kimball
Thomas Long
Michael Countryman
Lou Colasuonno
Mike Mcalary
Pete Hamill
John Miller
Gary Dourdan
Jeannie Williams
Bob Costas
Yvonne Warden
Jeffrey H Kaufman
Cheryl Howard
Robert Duvall
Louisa Marie
Donna Hanover
Amelia Campbell
James Nestor
Jean Speegle Howard
Jane Hanson
Jack Mcgee
Carol Ann Donohue
Catherine O'hara
Chuck Scarborough
Rance Howard
Erika Johnson
Victor Truro
Richard Price
David J Birnbach
John F Rhodes
Kurt Loder
Paul Geier
Daniel Kenney
Linda Stasi
Frank Inzerillo
Scott Rosenstock
William Kunstler
Geoffrey Owens
Rosanna Scotto
Glenn Close
Herbert Rubens
Harsh Nayyar
William Prince
Clint Howard
Bobo Lewis
Julie Rowen
John Eric Bentley
Roma Maffia
Maureen Goldfedder
Karen Church
Michael Michael
Jill Hennessy
Brenda Blackmon
Edward Hibbert
Herb Krystall
Michael Moran
Valerie Coleman
Jan Mickens
Vickie Thomas
Michael Keaton
Jim Meskimen
Jason Robards Jr.
Graydon Carter
Debbie Gross
Wylie Weeks
Bruce Altman
Miles Watson
Jack O'connell
Joe Viviani
James Colby
Diane Gnagnarelli
Jack Kehoe
Dini Von Mueffling
Augusta Dabney
Randy Quaid
Marisa Tomei
Divina Cook
Cedric Young
Christi Hatcher
Benny Benowitz
Cynthia Carter
Jacqueline Murphy
Crew
Maher Ahmad
Glenn Allen
Billy Anganos
Donald Angst
Michael Anthony
Antony Baldasare
Guy Barresi
Thomas Beattie
Michael Bedard
Michael Lee Benson
Jeffrey T Bernstein
Peter Betulia
Brenda Blackmon
Joan G. Bostwick
Douglas Botnick
Nancy Boytos-amanuel
John Brady
Richard Brick
David Brian Brown
Fern Buchner
Paul Bucossi
Pete Bucossi
Milton Buras
Eva Z. Cabrera
Nancy Cabrera
Kristin Cameron
Jay Cannold
Danny Canovas
Jaymie Cantavero
Cynthia Carter
Graydon Carter
Mike Cassidy
John Cenatiempo
Karen Church
Anthony Ciccolini
Hugo Cimmelli
Richard Clark
Carl Clifford
Lou Colasuonno
Valerie Coleman
Joseph R Collins
O J Connell Iii
William M Connor
David Cooney
Kathleen Corgan
Joe Coscia
Danny Coss
Bob Costas
Patrick Cousins
Margaret Craven
Ralph Crowley
James Davies
Eva Davy
Andrew J. Day
Sandy De Crescent
June Decamp
Eric Dilucente
Rick Dior
Ellen Doak
Gerald Donlan
Robert T Donovan
Norman Douglass
Lamont Dozier
Dean Drabin
Lauren Draper
Michael Dunn
Tony Dunne
Robert Dwyer
Dan Edelstein
Ann L Edgworth
Karen E. Etcoff
William Farber
George Fares
Robert Featherstone
Louis Ferraioli
Eugene Ferrara
Irene Ferrari
M Findling
Mo Flam
Jim Flamberg
Richard Formby
Richard Friedlander
Lisa Frucht
Ellen Gannon
John Gaskin
Marvin Gaye
Peter Gelfman
Ed Gleason
Diane Gnagarelli
Nansea Lee Goldberg
Brian Grazer
Melvin Green
Alonzo Greer
Susanna Griffith
John Grimolizzi
Debbie Gross
David Gulick
Wendi Haas-hammond
Larry Hackett
Peter G Hackman
Ann Hadsell
Hap Hairston
Todd Hallowell
Todd Hallowell
Todd Hallowell
Pete Hamill
Dan Hanley
Donna Hanover
Jane Hanson
John Patrick Hayden
Jack Hayes
Kevin Henry
Don Hewitt
Michael Hill
Janet Hirshenson
Trish Hofmann
Brian Holland
Edward Holland
D Hussman
Edward Iacobelli
Edward Iacobelli
Ray Iacobelli
Joseph Iberti
Laura Iler
Don Imus
Jane Jenkins
Tom Jones
Jerry Kadar
Richard S Kamin
Jenny Kane
Chaim Kantor
Peter Kember
Daniel Boy Kenney
Todd Kleitsch
David Koepp
David Koepp
Stephen Koepp
Elise Konialian
Paul Kramer
Tom Kramer
Kenneth Kroll
Herb Krystall
William Kunstler
Jim Lang
Lester Lanin
Sal Lanza
Robert Lapine
Kay Lark
Michael Laudati
Donald J. Lee
Vincent M Lee
Lisa J Levine
Clay Liversidge
Karen Lloyd
Kurt Loder
Edward W Lowry
Martin Lowry
Jane Luttenberger
Bruce Maccallum
Brian Macdonald
Steve Mack
Milton Maldonado
Bobby Mancuso
Sergio Marmeolejo
Carillo Roman Marquez
Neal Martz
Mike Mcalary
Anthony Mcguinness
Victor Meich
Danny Michael
Anastas Michos
John Miller
Eytan Mirsky
Joanna Molloy
Richard Montgomery
Michelle Morrissey
Brett Moss
Thomas A Mulino
Raymond Murphy
Yvette Nabel
Don Nace
Rob O' Neill
Randy Newman
Randy Newman
Randy Newman
Mark Nicholas
Sean O'brien
Brendan C O'connor
Tom O'halloran
Candi Orsini
Al Palmer
John Panuccio
Janet Paparazzo
Addison Pettit
Bill Pine
Aldric Porter
Aldric Porter
Robert Prate
Thomas Prate
Richard Price
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Original Song
Articles
Spalding Gray (1941-2004)
Gray was born in Barrington, Rhode Island on June 5, 1941, one of three sons born to Rockwell and Elizabeth Gray. He began pursuing an acting career at Emerson College in Boston. After graduation, he relocated to New York, where he acted in several plays in the late '60s and early '70s. He scored a breakthrough when he landed the lead role of Hoss in Sam Shepard's Off-Broadway hit Tooth of Crime in its 1973 New York premiere. Three years later he co-founded the avant-garde theatrical troupe, The Wooster Group with Willem Dafoe.
It was this period in the late '70s, when he was performing in Manhattan's underground theater circles, did Gray carve out his niche as a skilled monologist. His first formal monologue was about his childhood Sex and Death to the Age 14, performed at the Performing Garage in Manhattan in 1979; next came his adventures as a young university student Booze, Cars and College Girls in 1980; and the following year, he dealt with his chronicles as a struggling actor, A Personal History of the American Theater. These productions were all critical successes, and Gray soon became the darling of a small cult as his harrowing but funny takes on revealing the emotional and psychological cracks in his life brought some fresh air to the genre of performance art.
Although acting in small parts in film since the '70s, it wasn't until he garnered a role in The Killing Fields (1984), that he began to gain more prominent exposure. His experiences making The Killing Fields formed the basis of his one-man stage show Swimming to Cambodia which premiered on Off-Broadway in 1985. Both haunting and humorous, the plainsong sincerity of his performance exuded a raw immediacy and fragile power. Gray managed to relate his personal turmoil to larger issues of morality throughout the play, including absurdities in filmmaking, prostitution in Bangkok (where the movie was shot), and the genocidal reign of the Pol Pot. Gray won an Obie Award - the Off-Broadway's equivalent to the Tony Award - for his performance and two years later, his play was adapted by Jonathan Demme onto film, further broadening his acceptance as a unique and vital artistic talent.
After the success of Swimming to Cambodia, Gray found some work in the mainstream: Bette Midler's fiance in Beaches (1988), a regular part for one season as Fran Drescher's therapist in the CBS sitcom The Nanny (1989-90), a sardonic editor in Ron Howard's underrated comedy The Paper (1994), and a recent appearance as a doctor in Meg Ryan's romantic farce Kate & Leopold (2001). He also had two more of his monologues adapted to film: Monster in a Box (1992) and Gray's Anatomy (1996). Both films were further meditations on life and death done with the kind of biting personal wit that was the charming trademark of Gray.
His life took a sudden downturn when he suffered a frightening head-on car crash during a 2001 vacation in Ireland to celebrate his 60th birthday. He suffered a cracked skull, a broken hip and nerve damage to one foot and although he recovered physically, the incident left him traumatized. He tried jumping from a bridge near his Long Island home in October 2002. Family members, fearing for his safety, and well aware of his family history of mental illness (his mother committed suicide in 1967) convinced him to seek treatment in a Connecticut psychiatric hospital the following month.
Sadly, despite his release, Gary's mental outlook did not improve. He was last seen leaving his Manhattan apartment on January 10, and witnesses had reported a man fitting Gray's description look despondent and upset on the Staten Island Ferry that evening. He is survived by his spouse Kathleen Russo; two sons, Forrest and Theo; Russo's daughter from a previous relationship, Marissa; and two brothers, Rockwell and Channing.
by Michael T. Toole
Spalding Gray (1941-2004)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Expanded Release in United States April 1, 1994
Released in United States on Video October 19, 1994
Released in United States Spring March 18, 1994
Wide Release in United States March 25, 1994
Began shooting July 19, 1993.
Completed shooting September 30, 1993.
Released in United States Spring March 18, 1994
Wide Release in United States March 25, 1994
Expanded Release in United States April 1, 1994
Released in United States on Video October 19, 1994